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The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2010

Large Urban Outbreak of Orally Acquired Acute Chagas Disease at a School in Caracas, Venezuela

Belkisyolé Alarcón de Noya; Zoraida Díaz-Bello; Cecilia Colmenares; Raiza Ruiz-Guevara; Luciano Mauriello; Reinaldo Zavala-Jaspe; José Antonio Suárez; Teresa Abate; Laura Naranjo; Manuel Paiva; Lavinia Rivas; Julio Castro; Juan Marques; Ivan Mendoza; Harry Acquatella; Jaime R. Torres; Oscar Noya

BACKGROUND Trypanosoma cruzi oral transmission is possible through food contamination by vectors feces. Little is known about the epidemiology and clinical features of microepidemics of orally acquired acute Chagas disease (CD). METHODS A case-control, cohort-nested, epidemiological study was conducted during an outbreak of acute CD that affected a school community. Structured interviews were designed to identify symptoms and sources of infection. Electrocardiograms were obtained for all patients. Specific serum antibodies were assessed by immunoenzimatic and indirect hemagglutination tests. In some cases, parasitemia was tested directly or by culture, animal inoculation, and/or a polymerase chain reaction technique. RESULTS Infection was confirmed in 103 of 1000 exposed individuals. Of those infected, 75% were symptomatic, 20.3% required hospitalization, 59% showed ECG abnormalities, parasitemia was documented in 44, and 1 child died. Clinical features differed from those seen in vectorial transmission. The infection rate was significantly higher among younger children. An epidemiological investigation incriminated contaminated fresh guava juice as the sole source of infection. CONCLUSIONS This outbreak was unique, because it affected a large, urban, predominantly young, middle-class, otherwise healthy population and resulted in an unprecedented public health emergency. Rapid diagnosis and treatment avoided higher lethality. Food-borne transmission of T. cruzi may occur more often than is currently recognized.


International Journal for Parasitology | 2010

Trypanosoma cruzi I genotypes in different geographical regions and transmission cycles based on a microsatellite motif of the intergenic spacer of spliced-leader genes.

Carolina Cura; Ana María Mejía-Jaramillo; Tomás Duffy; Juan M. Burgos; Marcela S. Rodriguero; Marta V. Cardinal; Sonia A. Kjos; Rodrigo Gurgel-Gonçalves; Denis Blanchet; Luis Miguel De Pablos; Nicolás Tomasini; Alexandre J. da Silva; Graciela Russomando; César Augusto Cuba Cuba; Christine Aznar; Teresa Abate; Mariano J. Levin; Antonio Osuna; Ricardo E. Gürtler; Patricio Diosque; Aldo Solari; Omar Triana-Chávez; Alejandro G. Schijman

The intergenic region of spliced-leader (SL-IR) genes from 105 Trypanosoma cruzi I (Tc I) infected biological samples, culture isolates and stocks from 11 endemic countries, from Argentina to the USA were characterised, allowing identification of 76 genotypes with 54 polymorphic sites from 123 aligned sequences. On the basis of the microsatellite motif proposed by Herrera et al. (2007) to define four haplotypes in Colombia, we could classify these genotypes into four distinct Tc I SL-IR groups, three corresponding to the former haplotypes Ia (11 genotypes), Ib (11 genotypes) and Id (35 genotypes); and one novel group, Ie (19 genotypes). Genotypes harbouring the Tc Ic motif were not detected in our study. Tc Ia was associated with domestic cycles in southern and northern South America and sylvatic cycles in Central and North America. Tc Ib was found in all transmission cycles from Colombia. Tc Id was identified in all transmission cycles from Argentina and Colombia, including Chagas cardiomyopathy patients, sylvatic Brazilian samples and human cases from French Guiana, Panama and Venezuela. Tc Ie gathered five samples from domestic Triatoma infestans from northern Argentina, nine samples from wild Mepraia spinolai and Mepraia gajardoi and two chagasic patients from Chile and one from a Bolivian patient with chagasic reactivation. Mixed infections by Tc Ia+Tc Id, Tc Ia+Tc Ie and Tc Id+Tc Ie were detected in vector faeces and isolates from human and vector samples. In addition, Tc Ia and Tc Id were identified in different tissues from a heart transplanted Chagas cardiomyopathy patient with reactivation, denoting histotropism. Trypanosoma cruzi I SL-IR genotypes from parasites infecting Triatoma gerstaeckeri and Didelphis virginiana from USA, T. infestans from Paraguay, Rhodnius nasutus and Rhodnius neglectus from Brazil and M. spinolai and M. gajardoi from Chile are to our knowledge described for the first time.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2013

Analytical Performance of a Multiplex Real-Time PCR Assay Using TaqMan Probes for Quantification of Trypanosoma cruzi Satellite DNA in Blood Samples

Tomás Duffy; Carolina Cura; Juan C. Ramirez; Teresa Abate; Nelly Melina Cayo; Rudy Parrado; Zoraida Díaz Bello; Elsa F. Velazquez; Arturo Muñoz-Calderón; Natalia Anahí Juiz; Lineth Garcia; Adelina Riarte; Julio Ruben Nasser; Susana B. Ocampo; Zaida E. Yadon; Faustino Torrico; Belkisyolé Alarcón de Noya; Isabela Ribeiro; Alejandro G. Schijman

Background The analytical validation of sensitive, accurate and standardized Real-Time PCR methods for Trypanosoma cruzi quantification is crucial to provide a reliable laboratory tool for diagnosis of recent infections as well as for monitoring treatment efficacy. Methods/Principal Findings We have standardized and validated a multiplex Real-Time quantitative PCR assay (qPCR) based on TaqMan technology, aiming to quantify T. cruzi satellite DNA as well as an internal amplification control (IAC) in a single-tube reaction. IAC amplification allows rule out false negative PCR results due to inhibitory substances or loss of DNA during sample processing. The assay has a limit of detection (LOD) of 0.70 parasite equivalents/mL and a limit of quantification (LOQ) of 1.53 parasite equivalents/mL starting from non-boiled Guanidine EDTA blood spiked with T. cruzi CL-Brener stock. The method was evaluated with blood samples collected from Chagas disease patients experiencing different clinical stages and epidemiological scenarios: 1- Sixteen Venezuelan patients from an outbreak of oral transmission, 2- Sixty three Bolivian patients suffering chronic Chagas disease, 3- Thirty four Argentinean cases with chronic Chagas disease, 4- Twenty seven newborns to seropositive mothers, 5- A seronegative receptor who got infected after transplantation with a cadaveric kidney explanted from an infected subject. Conclusions/Significance The performing parameters of this assay encourage its application to early assessment of T. cruzi infection in cases in which serological methods are not informative, such as recent infections by oral contamination or congenital transmission or after transplantation with organs from seropositive donors, as well as for monitoring Chagas disease patients under etiological treatment.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2013

Trypanosoma cruzi genotyping supports a common source of infection in a school-related oral outbreak of acute Chagas disease in Venezuela

Zoraida Díaz-Bello; M.C. Thomas; Manuel Carlos López; Reinaldo Zavala-Jaspe; Oscar Noya; B. Alarcón de Noya; Teresa Abate

Trypanosoma cruzi I, a discrete typing unit (DTU) found in human infections in Venezuela and other countries of the northern region of South America and in Central America, has been recently classified into five intra-DTU genotypes (Ia, Ib, Ic, Id, Ie) based on sequence polymorphisms found in the spliced leader intergenic region. In this paper we report the genotype identification of T. cruzi human isolates from one outbreak of acute orally acquired Chagas disease that occurred in a non-endemic region of Venezuela and from T. cruzi triatomine and rat isolates captured at a guava juice preparation site which was identified as the presumptive source of infection. The genotyping of all these isolates as TcId supports the view of a common source of infection in this oral Chagas disease outbreak through the ingestion of guava juice. Implications for clinical manifestations and dynamics of transmission cycles are discussed.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2012

The performance of laboratory tests in the management of a large outbreak of orally transmitted Chagas disease

Belkisyolé Alarcón de Noya; Zoraida Díaz-Bello; Cecilia Colmenares; Reinaldo Zavala-Jaspe; Teresa Abate; Rosa Contreras; Sandra Losada; Domingo Artigas; Luciano Mauriello; Raiza Ruiz-Guevara; Oscar Noya

Orally transmitted Chagas disease (ChD), which is a well-known entity in the Brazilian Amazon Region, was first documented in Venezuela in December 2007, when 103 people attending an urban public school in Caracas became infected by ingesting juice that was contaminated with Trypanosoma cruzi. The infection occurred 45-50 days prior to the initiation of the sampling performed in the current study. Parasitological methods were used to diagnose the first nine symptomatic patients; T. cruzi was found in all of them. However, because this outbreak was managed as a sudden emergency during Christmas time, we needed to rapidly evaluate 1,000 people at risk, so we decided to use conventional serology to detect specific IgM and IgG antibodies via ELISA as well as indirect haemagglutination, which produced positive test results for 9.1%, 11.9% and 9.9% of the individuals tested, respectively. In other more restricted patient groups, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) provided more sensitive results (80.4%) than blood cultures (16.2%) and animal inoculations (11.6%). Although the classical diagnosis of acute ChD is mainly based on parasitological findings, highly sensitive and specific serological techniques can provide rapid results during large and severe outbreaks, as described herein. The use of these serological techniques allows prompt treatment of all individuals suspected of being infected, resulting in reduced rates of morbidity and mortality.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2005

A mucin like gene different from the previously reported members of the mucin like gene families is transcribed in Trypanosoma cruzi but not in Trypanosoma rangeli

Teresa Abate; Mónica Rincón; Zoraida Díaz-Bello; Lilian Spencer; Alexis Rodríguez-Acosta

Trypanosoma cruzi expresses mucin like glycoproteins encoded by a complex multigene family. In this work, we report the transcription in T. cruzi but not in T. rangeli of a mucin type gene automatically annotated by the T. cruzi genome project. The gene showed no nucleotide similarities with the previously reported T. cruzi mucin like genes, although the computational analysis of the deduced protein showed that it has the characteristic features of mucins: a signal peptide sequence, O-glycosylation sites, and glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor sequence. The presence in this gene of N-terminal and C-terminal coding sequences common to other annotated mucin like genes suggests the existence of a new mucin like gene family.


Parasite Epidemiology and Control | 2016

Orally-transmitted Chagas disease: Epidemiological, clinical, serological and molecular outcomes of a school microepidemic in Chichiriviche de la Costa, Venezuela

Belkisyolé Alarcón de Noya; Cecilia Colmenares; Zoraida Díaz-Bello; Raiza Ruiz-Guevara; Karen Medina; Arturo Muñoz-Calderón; Luciano Mauriello; Elida Cabrera; Luís Montiel; Sandra Losada; Jetzi Martínez; Raul Espinosa; Teresa Abate

Oral transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi is a frequent cause of acute Chagas disease (ChD). In the present cross-sectional study, we report the epidemiological, clinical, serological and molecular outcomes of the second largest outbreak of oral ChD described in the literature. It occurred in March 2009 in Chichiriviche de la Costa, a rural seashore community at the central littoral in Venezuela. The vehicle was an artisanal guava juice prepared at the local school and Panstrongylus geniculatus was the vector involved. TcI genotype was isolated from patients and vector; some showed a mixture of haplotypes. Using molecular markers, parasitic loads were high. Eighty-nine cases were diagnosed, the majority (87.5%) in school children 6–15 years of age. Frequency of symptomatic patients was high (89.9%) with long-standing fever in 87.5%; 82.3% had pericardial effusion detected by echocardiogram and 41% had EKG abnormalities. Three children, a pregnant woman and her stillborn child died (5.6% mortality). The community was addressed by simultaneous determination of specific IgG and IgM, confirmed with indirect hemagglutination and lytic antibodies. Determination of IgG and IgA in saliva had low sensitivity. No individual parasitological or serological technique diagnosed 100% of cases. Culture and PCR detected T. cruzi in 95.5% of examined individuals. Based on the increasing incidence of oral acute cases of ChD, it appears that food is becoming one of the most important modes of transmission in the Amazon, Caribbean and Andes regions of America.


Fems Immunology and Medical Microbiology | 1999

Trypanosoma cruzi and human ubiquitin are immunologically distinct proteins despite only three amino acid difference in their primary sequence

Senobia Télles; Teresa Abate; Thelma C Slezynger; Diana Henríquez


Biological Research | 1993

Cloning and partial characterization of a 28 kDa antigenic protein of Trypanosoma cruzi.

Teresa Abate; Monica Rosenberg; Rafael Rangel Aldao; Thelma C Slezynger


Boletin De Malariologia Y Salud Ambiental | 2009

Panstrongylus rufotuberculatus (Champion, 1899) naturalmente infectados con Trypanosoma cruzi en el estado Miranda, Venezuela

Reinaldo Zavala-Jaspe; Teresa Abate; M Reyes-Lugo; B. Alarcón de Noya; Zoraida Díaz-Bello

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Lilian Spencer

Simón Bolívar University

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Alejandro G. Schijman

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Carolina Cura

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Tomás Duffy

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Alexandre J. da Silva

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Sonia A. Kjos

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Zaida E. Yadon

Pan American Health Organization

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